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Many Catholic women refuse notion of never

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Such Catholic women are virtually fearless. They also are capable of healing the world.

Washington Post columnist E.J. Dionne, who is Catholic, understands this and has written an inspired piece about who should be the next pope.

He is hoping for a nun.

He can explain:

“The cardinals who will gather to elect a new pope know that one of the church’s central and most wrenching problems is the sex abuse scandal,” he writes. “An all-male hierarchy adopted policies to cover up the abuse and seemed far too inclined to put protecting the church’s image ahead of protecting children.

“Throughout history, it’s not uncommon for women to be brought in to put right what men have put wrong. A female pope would automatically be distanced from this past and could have a degree of credibility that a male member of the hierarchy simply could not.”

I am, again, reminded of Sister Simone Campbell and what happened when she took her show on the road.

Campbell is not only a nun but an attorney and the executive director of NETWORK, a national lobbying group of sisters who fight for economic and social justice. After the Vatican targeted their group as a “suspect organization,” they reflected and regrouped. They figured that if they were getting all this attention, they may as well put the publicity to good use. So they launched a protest against Ryan’s budget plan, arguing that it would further hurt those Americans already suffering.

The media – and a number of national talk show hosts – fell in love. Everywhere the nuns went, standing-room-only crowds greeted them like rock stars. In Cleveland, more than 400 in the audience – most of them gray-haired women – rose to their feet in thunderous applause when Simone entered the room.

She was energetic.

She was funny.

She was the smartest person in any room.

In the eyes of so many, she was also a glimpse into what the Catholic Church could be – make that will be – one fine day.

• Connie Schultz is a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist and an essayist for Parade magazine. She is the author of two books, including “...and His Lovely Wife,” which chronicled the successful race of her husband, Sherrod Brown, for the U.S. Senate.

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